登陆注册
37919000000039

第39章 THE TEARS OF AH KIM(1)

There was a great noise and racket, but no scandal, in Honolulu's Chinatown. Those within hearing distance merely shrugged their shoulders and smiled tolerantly at the disturbance as an affair of accustomed usualness. "What is it?" asked Chin Mo, down with a sharp pleurisy, of his wife, who had paused for a second at the open window to listen.

"Only Ah Kim," was her reply. "His mother is beating him again."

The fracas was taking place in the garden, behind the living rooms that were at the back of the store that fronted on the street with the proud sign above: AH KIM COMPANY, GENERAL MERCHANDISE. The garden was a miniature domain, twenty feet square, that somehow cunningly seduced the eye into a sense and seeming of illimitable vastness. There were forests of dwarf pines and oaks, centuries old yet two or three feet in height, and imported at enormous care and expense. A tiny bridge, a pace across, arched over a miniature river that flowed with rapids and cataracts from a miniature lake stocked with myriad-finned, orange-miracled goldfish that in proportion to the lake and landscape were whales. On every side the many windows of the several-storied shack-buildings looked down. In the centre of the garden, on the narrow gravelled walk close beside the lake Ah Kim was noisily receiving his beating.

No Chinese lad of tender and beatable years was Ah Kim. His was the store of Ah Kim Company, and his was the achievement of building it up through the long years from the shoestring of savings of a contract coolie labourer to a bank account in four figures and a credit that was gilt edged. An even half-century of summers and winters had passed over his head, and, in the passing, fattened him comfortably and snugly. Short of stature, his full front was as rotund as a water-melon seed. His face was moon-faced. His garb was dignified and silken, and his black-silk skull-cap with the red button atop, now, alas! fallen on the ground, was the skull-cap worn by the successful and dignified merchants of his race.

But his appearance, in this moment of the present, was anything but dignified. Dodging and ducking under a rain of blows from a bamboo cane, he was crouched over in a half-doubled posture. When he was rapped on the knuckles and elbows, with which he shielded his face and head, his winces were genuine and involuntary. From the many surrounding windows the neighbourhood looked down with placid enjoyment.

And she who wielded the stick so shrewdly from long practice!

Seventy-four years old, she looked every minute of her time. Her thin legs were encased in straight-lined pants of linen stiff-textured and shiny-black. Her scraggly grey hair was drawn unrelentingly and flatly back from a narrow, unrelenting forehead.

Eyebrows she had none, having long since shed them. Her eyes, of pin-hole tininess, were blackest black. She was shockingly cadaverous. Her shrivelled forearm, exposed by the loose sleeve, possessed no more of muscle than several taut bowstrings stretched across meagre bone under yellow, parchment-like skin. Along this mummy arm jade bracelets shot up and down and clashed with every blow.

"Ah!" she cried out, rhythmically accenting her blows in series of three to each shrill observation. "I forbade you to talk to Li Faa. To-day you stopped on the street with her. Not an hour ago.

Half an hour by the clock you talked.--What is that?"

"It was the thrice-accursed telephone," Ah Kim muttered, while she suspended the stick to catch what he said. "Mrs. Chang Lucy told you. I know she did. I saw her see me. I shall have the telephone taken out. It is of the devil."

"It is a device of all the devils," Mrs. Tai Fu agreed, taking a fresh grip on the stick. "Yet shall the telephone remain. I like to talk with Mrs. Chang Lucy over the telephone."

"She has the eyes of ten thousand cats," quoth Ah Kim, ducking and receiving the stick stinging on his knuckles. "And the tongues of ten thousand toads," he supplemented ere his next duck.

"She is an impudent-faced and evil-mannered hussy," Mrs. Tai Fu accented.

"Mrs. Chang Lucy was ever that," Ah Kim murmured like the dutiful son he was.

"I speak of Li Faa," his mother corrected with stick emphasis.

"She is only half Chinese, as you know. Her mother was a shameless kanaka. She wears skirts like the degraded haole women--also corsets, as I have seen for myself. Where are her children? Yet has she buried two husbands."

"The one was drowned, the other kicked by a horse," Ah Kim qualified.

"A year of her, unworthy son of a noble father, and you would gladly be going out to get drowned or be kicked by a horse."

Subdued chucklings and laughter from the window audience applauded her point.

"You buried two husbands yourself, revered mother," Ah Kim was stung to retort.

"I had the good taste not to marry a third. Besides, my two husbands died honourably in their beds. They were not kicked by horses nor drowned at sea. What business is it of our neighbours that you should inform them I have had two husbands, or ten, or none? You have made a scandal of me, before all our neighbours, and for that I shall now give you a real beating."

Ah Kim endured the staccato rain of blows, and said when his mother paused, breathless and weary:

"Always have I insisted and pleaded, honourable mother, that you beat me in the house, with the windows and doors closed tight, and not in the open street or the garden open behind the house.

"You have called this unthinkable Li Faa the Silvery Moon Blossom,"

Mrs. Tai Fu rejoined, quite illogically and femininely, but with utmost success in so far as she deflected her son from continuance of the thrust he had so swiftly driven home.

"Mrs. Chang Lucy told you," he charged.

"I was told over the telephone," his mother evaded. "I do not know all voices that speak to me over that contrivance of all the devils."

Strangely, Ah Kim made no effort to run away from his mother, which he could easily have done. She, on the other hand, found fresh cause for more stick blows.

同类推荐
  • 题松江驿

    题松江驿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 西方要决科注

    西方要决科注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太平经圣君秘旨

    太平经圣君秘旨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Tom Tiddler's Ground

    Tom Tiddler's Ground

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 達海叢書總目提要

    達海叢書總目提要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 凤岗之巅

    凤岗之巅

    穿越奇情,命运的齿轮已咔咔作响,一切是天意还是人为?如何不思平凡事,箫声入竹尘耳中。
  • 随机签到系统流之小度我求求你了

    随机签到系统流之小度我求求你了

    聪明如我,得到了一个“签到系统”,可是这个系统每天只能签到一次,而且签到的奖励还是随机的?有可能今天就给你一间别墅,但也有可能就只给你一个大嘴巴子?小度系统说了一个关键词——签到奖励和宿主的“心”有关联——《心之所向,万物皆可签》。宿主有一张好牌,到底是聪明一世还是糊涂一时呢?当然,系统里还有许多隐藏功能,等待宿主去体验和发掘。
  • 为快穿而快穿

    为快穿而快穿

    呃…………………………………………玛丽苏?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 惊宠毒爱:总裁请淡定

    惊宠毒爱:总裁请淡定

    麻……!感觉手臂麻地快要断了!抽出环住他的手,甩了两下,重新换个地方放着。头顶上的男人看着她做完一系列动作却仍然没有睁开眼睛!诶?不对啊……感觉到手上触碰到什么东西,开始还没有,怎么越来越……硬邦邦地……?好奇那是什么她又往下按了按,可是那东西像是跟她作对,不仅越来越硬……还越来越大!?该死,她一把握住那个东西,攒起劲儿往上拔……手腕被一股大力扼住!“疼!”她倏然睁开眼睛。南宫麟天脑袋上布满黑线,一双眼睛直直逼视她:“舍得醒了?”
  • 异界女武帝

    异界女武帝

    穿越到了异界大陆,重生在叶家废材家族小姐身上。虽然这不是他的身躯,叶越默默地接受变成女人的事实。但是偶然听说修炼到最高境界能够重塑身体。这令叶越的心如死灰复燃。女扮男装,创建地下势力,用武力降服对手,突破最高境界。
  • 你曾是谁的梦

    你曾是谁的梦

    八年前在讲台上挥斥方遒的言安不知道,自己已经像一粒种子,埋在一个少年的梦中。
  • 霸刀魂

    霸刀魂

    我向来不喜欢剑的高贵飘逸,也不爱那枪的轻灵洒脱;我只是刀客,向来只追求无所畏惧的勇气。无论你是百般诡计,还是那万千的神功,我只有一刀砍之。热血刀客夏胤,异世界的传奇人生!
  • 大小姐的超级保镖

    大小姐的超级保镖

    神医门大弟子,黑暗世界的王者……奉命回归都市,以未婚夫的身份保护苏家大小姐苏蔓语。原本以为只是一个撩撩妹子的轻松任务;但是随着时间的推进,一层层的黑幕向方桐包围过来。
  • 戮魔传

    戮魔传

    神前座,魔象生。屠戮,到底是拯救还是毁灭?愿得一身豪胆奇功,踏破宙宇,创世成神!且看《戮魔传》。(天赋,修真,成神;磨砺,挣扎,真相;争战,奇功,爱情......在已有之道上创立,在顺应的基础上打破,方是万灵你我生生不息的法则。)